The Frodsham Regulator was the most important of the scientific clocks used by the Melbourne Observatory in the 19th century. Purchased in 1865, it was linked to telescopes to map the southern hemisphere stars, set Standard Time for Victoria, and establish more precise measurements of Melbourne's longitude.

The Frodsham Regulator was the most important of the scientific clocks used by the Melbourne Observatory in the 19th century. Purchased in 1865, it was linked to telescopes to map the southern hemisphere stars, set Standard Time for Victoria, and establish more precise measurements of Melbourne's longitude.

It was an integral part of the first major international project to map the stars of the southern hemisphere. This was a collaborative project with the observatories at Cape of Good Hope and Madras, and coordinated by the Royal Observatory at Greenwich. The clock was located in the Library and linked electrically to the Second Transit Instrument in the Second Transit Room. By 1871 Government Astronomer Robert Ellery and his second assistant C Moerlin had observed the positions of nearly 50,000 stars. When Ellery visited Britain in 1875, the Astronomer Royal, George Airy, praised Ellery's work, stating publicly that the Melbourne Observatory had published the best catalogue of stars of of the Southern Hemisphere.

In 1883 the Frodsham No 1062 was moved to the new East Transit Room, and connected to the recently installed 8-inch Transit Telescope recently purchased from the London firm of Troughton & Simms. In conjunction with the 8 inch transit telescope and one or two other clocks, the Frodsham No 1062 was used to set Standard Time for the Colony of Victoria. The Frodsham was also involved in fixing the longitude of Melbourne. Recently established telegraphic connections with Greenwich Observatory, via the Overland Telegraph, Darwin and underwater cable, enabled the Observatory in 1883 to undertake a more accurate fixing of Melbourne Observatory's longitude.

The clock was transferred to Mt Stromlo Observatory in 1944, along with the 8-inch transit telescope. The telescope was subsequently sent to Greenwich Observatory, then returned to Melbourne in the 1970s, and is now held in the Museum's collection. The Frodsham No 1062, along with another ex-Melbourne Observatory Frodsham clock, was sold at public auction by Mt Stromlo in 1997. The clock was prevented from being exported under the Commonwealth Government's Protection of Moveable Cultural Heritage legislation.

Comments

IdrisPosted on 03 Jan 2015 1:36 PM

As a keen amateur horologist, I feel that there may be errors in the description of the dial of this regulator.The description states that the “Main dial denotes seconds. Small minute dial sits within main dial and 24 hour dial sits below.”However, the usual layout of dials on regulators is different. The seconds dial is almost invariably the small upper subdial. While it is not impossible that some regulators might have a centre seconds hand with minutes above and hours below, this would require a rather cumbersome gear train arrangement. That the Frodsham regulator uses the traditional layout is confirmed by the photograph of the movement, in which the escape wheel, which usually drives the seconds hand, can be seen to be behind the subdial rather than the main dial, and the centre wheel, which usually drives the minute hand, can be seen to be behind the main dial rather than the subdial. Furthermore, the hand of the main dial- the seconds hand according to the description- is not counterbalanced, something that seconds hands on precision regulators always are. The hand of the subdial, however, is. I would appreciate it is the museum would check the description.

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